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Jewish Bakery Burglarized in Canadian Town

In a statement to the Star, police confirmed they responded to a call for a break and enter that occurred “in the early morning hour” at a bakery near Bathurst Street and Ranee Avenue. 

Police added officers “are still investigating.”

In a story posted to Instagram on Wednesday morning, the bagel shop confirmed a break-in occurred overnight. A photo posted with the statement showed the store’s front door with its glass shattered. 

Despite the break-in, Gryfe’s Bagels confirmed it was open Wednesday. 

Gryfe’s is owned and operated by a Jewish family and has been in business for over a century. It’s been called one of two “founding temples of Canadian bagel making,” the other being St-Viateur in Montreal. 

The incident comes amid heightened tensions in the city and a rash of suspected hate crimes targeting the local Jewish community. 

“Add it to the rising wave of antisemitism and hate that is flooding our community,” tweeted Liberal MP Marco Mendicino Wednesday afternoon — before police had said the crime did not appear hate-motivated. “Those who are responsible for these crimes should be brought to justice.”

Earlier this month, Toronto police said they were investigating a suspected hate-motivated arson incident at a Jewish-owned deli in North York. Officers said they were called to International Delicatessen Foods on the morning of Jan. 3 after reports of a commercial industrial fire at the store. Video from the scene also showed the words “Free Palestine” tagged on the store front with graffiti. 

Staff Superintendent Pauline Gray later described the incident as a “criminal act” and called on people “to be vigilant.”

Jewish Professor Parts Way with MIT Over Antisemitic Colleagues

A Jewish MIT professor resigned his position last month after concluding that he could no longer work amid the rampant antisemitism that has displayed itself on campus since October 7.

Mauricio Karchmer, a Mexican Jew who was trained in computer science at Hebrew University, wrote in The Free Press that it wasn't until the reaction to the events of last fall's Hamas massacre that he was forced to reconsider his dream job.

He wrote that following the barbaric terrorist attack that killed 1,200 Israelis, he emailed the head of his department encouraging her to issue a statement of support for Israelis and Jews. Karchmer said such statements had been issued in the wake of George Floyd's murder and after a wave of anti-Asian violence - so he expected similar sympathy for Jews. 

But, like many around the country who had seen their companies and bosses convey public sympathy in the aftermath of horrible events that impacted other minority communities, Karchmer saw his boss fall far short of the mark with her statement.

The Monday after October 7, he wrote that the head of his department "and its office of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) sent out a message titled “A time for community support of each other."'

'The message was riddled with equivocations, without mentioning the barbarity of Hamas’s attack ... I was shocked that my institution - led by people who are meant to see the world rationally - could not simply condemn a brutal terrorist act,' he wrote.

Over the next several weeks, Karchmer saw antisemitic protests begin on the MIT campus, during which students shouted 'Free Palestine' and 'From the river to the sea.'

Even more shocking to the former finance executive was when his colleagues began supporting the students behavior.

Sophia Hasenfus, a Diversity, Equity, and Belonging Officer at MIT liked an X post on October 17 that claimed Israel 'doesn't have a right to exist,' because 'like the US,' it is 'an illegitimate settler-colony.'

One day later, a 'renowned' neuroscientist at the university posted that Israel is committing 'genocide.' The professor, Nancy Kanwisher, then posted that her department is looking for a 'diverse pool of candidates' to fill a tenure-track position.

'I remember thinking, with bitter irony, that Jewish academics need not apply,' wrote Karchmer.

In November, MIT linguistics professor Michel DeGraff wrote that students who had gathered to chant for another intifada 'have given me hope for the future.'

In the editorial, titled 'Standing Together Against Hate: From the River to the Sea, From Gaza to MIT,' he said that he'd taken his five-year-old daughter to one such protest.

Karchmer wrote that every part of the post-October 7 reaction on campus has been painful, but nothing moreso than 'watching the Israeli and Jewish students - who comprise fewer than six percent of the MIT student body - suffer.'

He wrote that despite MIT president Sally Kornbluth's disastrous testimony before congress in December, he does not believe 'she is the problem.'

Along with several peers of her, Kornbluth infamously failed to unequivocally responded yes when asked if calling for the genocide of Jews violated MIT's code of conduct.

'I think the problem at MIT - and across American academia - runs much deeper than the figureheads,' he wrote.

Students across the US have been radicalized by professors - like DeGraff - who push them toward progressive social justice values, Karchmer said. 

'America’s brightest minds are being manipulated by a force they don’t even understand to adopt a narrow view of the world,' Karchmer said.

This problem, the computer scientist concluded, means he can no longer agree to 'train kids in algorithms, knowing they might one day spread this ideology even further through their advanced knowledge.'

Just eight days after Kornbluth et al.'s disastrous appearance before congress, Karchmer tendered his resignation over the objection of his boss.

'I cannot continue teaching Algorithms to those who lack the most basic critical thinking skills or emotional intelligence. Nor can I teach those who condemn my Jewish identity or my support for Israel’s right to exist in peace with its neighbors,' he wrote in his letter. 

York Police Arrest Man for Assault Against Multiple Individuals in Antisemitic Attack

York Regional Police say they have laid charges in a suspected hate-motivated assault against four young adults who were walking home from synagogue in Vaughan last week.

Police said the incident occurred in the area of Bathurst Street and Flamingo Road at around 1:45 p.m. on Jan. 6. According to police, four young adults were walking home from synagogue when they were approached by a suspect on an electric bicycle.

Police said the victims felt intimidated by the way the suspect was operating his bike and an argument ensued in which the suspect allegedly spat at the victims and made antisemitic comments before riding away.

A suspect was identified and arrested the same day.

Police said Tuesday that 34-year-old Kenneth Jeewan Gobin of Vaughan has been charged with two counts of assault and one count of breach of probation.

"York Regional Police takes these matters seriously and is reminding the community we will not tolerate any form of hate crime or the threat of violence against anyone," YRP said in a statement. "All reports of hate crime or hate/bias incidents will be investigated thoroughly. If you witness or have been the victim of a hate crime or hate/bias incident, we encourage you to report it to police immediately."

Hate crimes have skyrocketed in the wake of the Israel-Hamas war.

Police said Tuesday that they are taking the incident seriously and urged anyone with information about hate-motivated incidents to come forward.

Man Arrested After Vandalizing Several Jewish-Owned Businesses in California

Authorities announced the man accused of vandalizing several businesses in the San Fernando Valley, several of them Jewish-owned, was arrested. 

The suspect was identified by investigators as 64-year-old Edelidio Wallace, who was experiencing homelessness

Officials with the Los Angeles Police Department said the rock-throwing, window-smashing spree began over the weekend in Woodland Hills. Some of the businesses hit include a trophy and gift shop, a deli, a dance studio and a bakery. 

Wallace allegedly struck again Monday morning in Canoga Park, targeting an In-N-Out, a Sherwin-Williams, and a Big O Tires store.

Online records show this was not the suspect's first run-in with the law for similar offenses. In 2018, Wallace was arrested in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for vandalizing 11 Mexican restaurants across the state. He allegedly threw rocks through windows and left a threatening note claiming retaliation against the Mexican mafia. Albuquerque police report that during his arrest, he threw an ax at an officer, narrowly missing the officer and striking a police car.

Despite prosecutors' request to keep the suspect in jail in Albuquerque until his trial, a judge released him, and he subsequently failed to appear in court.

An arrest warrant was issued for Wallace in 2018, and it remains unclear if this issue has been resolved. 

Currently, Wallace faces additional vandalism charges in Los Angeles, with bail set at $5,000.

Texas Police Arrest 13 Pro-Hamas Demonstrators For Blocking Entrance to Major Airport

Dallas Police arrested more than a dozen people who were protesting against the Gaza war by blocking the entrance to Dallas Love Field Airport on Monday evening.

The Dallas Police Department said officers were called after people reported protestors blocking traffic at the intersection of Mockingbird Lane and Herb Kelleher Way at about 6:20 p.m.

Protestors were demonstrating outside the airport in support of Palestine and calling on President Joe Biden to pursue a ceasefire, according to NBC 5's Keenan Willard.

Biden was in Dallas Monday evening to attend the wake for longtime U.S. Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson and had flown into and out of Love Field.

Police said they gave the protestors three warnings to clear the roadway, but they refused. As a result, 13 demonstrators were arrested and charged with obstruction of a highway or other passageways.

No injuries were reported in connection with the incident.

Large Assembly in Italy Pays Controversial Tribute to Hitler Despite Nationwide Ban

Opposition politicians in Italy on Monday demanded that the government, headed by far-right Premier Giorgia Meloni, explain how hundreds of demonstrators were able to give a banned fascist salute at a Rome rally without any police intervention.

The rally Sunday night in a working-class neighbourhood commemorated the slaying in 1978 of two members of a neo-fascist youth group in an attack later claimed by extreme-left militants.

At one point in the rally, participants raised their right arm in a straight-armed salute that harks back to the fascist dictatorship of Benito Mussolini. Under post-war legislation, use of fascist symbolism, including the straight-armed salute also known as the Roman salute, is banned.

Democratic Party chief Elly Schlein, who heads the largest opposition party in the legislature, was among those demanding Monday that Meloni’s interior minister appear in Parliament to explain why police apparently did nothing to stop the rally.

Schlein and others outraged by the use of the fascist-salute in the rally noted that last month, when a theatregoer at La Scala’s opera house’s premier shouted “Long live anti-fascist Italy!” The man was quickly surrounded by police from Italy’s anti-terrorism squad.

“If you shout ‘Long live anti-fascist Italy’ in a theatre, you get identified (by police); if you go to a neo-fascist gathering with Roman salutes and banner, you don’t,’' said Schlein in a post on the social media platform X. Then she added: “Meloni has nothing to say?”

Rai state television said Monday evening that Italian police were investigating the mass salute at the rally.

Deputy Premier Antoni Tajani, who leads a centre-right party in Meloni’s 14-month-old coalition, was pressed by reporters about the fascist salute.

“We’re a force that certainly isn’t fascist, we’re anti-fascist,’' Tajani said at a news conference on another matter. Tajani, who also serves as foreign minister, noted that under Italian law, supporting fascism is banned. All rallies “in support of dictatorships must be condemned,” he said.

Leaders of Italy’s Jewish community also expressed dismay over the fascist salute.

"It’s right to recall the victims of political violence, but in 2024 this can’t happen with hundreds of people who give the Roman salute," Ruth Dureghello, who for several years led Rome’s Jewish community, wrote on X.

Mussolini’s anti-Jewish laws helped pave the way for the deportation of Italian Jews during the German occupation of Rome in the latter years of World War II.

The rally was held on the anniversary of the deaths of two young men outside an office of what was then the neo-fascist Italian Social Movement, a party formed after World War II that attracted nostalgists for Mussolini. After the two youths were killed, a third far-right youth was killed during clashes with police in demonstrations that followed.

Meloni, whose Brothers of Italy party has its roots in neo-fascism, has distanced from Mussolini’s dictatorship, declaring that “ the Italian right has handed fascism over to history for decades now.”

The late 1970s saw Italy blooded by violence by extreme right-wing and extreme left-wing proponents. It included deadly bombings linked to the far-right, and assassinations and kidnappings claimed by the Red Brigades and other left-wing extremists.

Bomb Threat Made at Indiana Synagogue

A bomb threat was made at a synagogue in Michigan City this morning.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation is involved in trying to come up with a suspect.

According to Michigan City Police, the Sinai Temple at 2800 Franklin Street received the bomb threat in an email. Outside police agencies from Porter County then brought in their bomb detection dogs and no explosives were found during the ensuing search.

The FBI is involved in the investigation because of current worldwide tensions between Israel and Palestine.

According to the FBI, more than 1,100 anti-Jewish hate crimes were reported nationwide in 2022, the most recent year for which data was available.

Hundreds of Anti-Israel Protesters Arrested After Swarming New York Bridges and Tunnel

Hundreds of anti-Israel protesters swarmed three bridges and the Holland Tunnel in Lower Manhattan on Monday morning, creating chaos as they blocked traffic and leading to more than 330 arrests.

Demonstrators from the “Shut it Down for Palestine” rally, whose organizers reportedly included the New York chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, first marched through City Hall Park. Then groups of them descended on the Brooklyn, Manhattan and Williamsburg bridges and tunnel around 9:40 a.m., wreaking havoc as they shut down at least sections of the major travel thoroughfares for more than an hour.

“You can’t do that! It’s against the law!” an agitated motorist yelled at some of the protesters as he tried in vain to make a left onto the Manhattan Bridge from the Bowery, while another man filming the confrontation with his phone shouted, “Hit ’em all! Run ’em over!”

The driver then got out of his vehicle and shoved three of the demonstrators, warning them to stay away from his car as he screamed, “I have a daughter in Brooklyn! … I have to get home!”

The protesters eventually backed off and allowed the driver to cross the river. 

Some of the demonstrators sat down in the middle of major roadways, linking themselves together using zip ties and even cement-filled tires, which forced cops to employ power tools to get them apart.

Protesters also chanted, “NYPD, KKK, IDF they’re all the same!” according to video posted on social media. IDF refers to the Israel Defense Forces.

A group of demonstrators stood in front of the entrance to the tunnel holding signs demanding, “Lift the Siege of Gaza, Ceasefire Now,” as well as “End the Occupation, Free All Palestinian Prisoners, USA Stop Arming Israel,” according to video posted on X.

“Free, free Palestine!” the protesters yelled.

The NYPD took 209 protesters — most of them women — into custody at the spans between Manhattan and Brooklyn, police officials said.

At the Brooklyn Bridge, 94 protesters were apprehended, including 71 women, police said. About 100 demonstrators were blocking traffic there at the peak of the protest, according to officials.

Suspects were photographed at the mouth of the bridge being handcuffed behind their backs with zip ties and corralled onto an out-of-service MTA bus

Officers also arrested 87 protesters — including 64 women — at the Manhattan Bridge, where another hundred people demonstrated, police said. 

The Williamsburg Bridge was the site of 28 arrests and a smaller gathering of 40 demonstrators.

Another 125 arrests were made at the Holland Tunnel by Port Authority Police, where 150 people had blocked traffic to New Jersey, officials said. 

The names and charges of the suspects were not immediately released by police, but many of them will face misdemeanor raps and only receive desk-appearance tickets, cops said.

The groups behind the protest included the New York chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America, Jewish Voice for Peace and the Palestinian Youth Movement, Reuters reported.

Mayor Eric Adams said he understood “the pain of innocent lives being lost right now” but questioned the tactics used by pro-Palestinian demonstrators.

“The right to protest does not give one the right to block bridges and tunnels, as we saw this morning,” Adams said. “The goal is to peacefully protest without doing major disruption to the city.”

But Oscar winner Susan Sarandon, who was dropped by her talent agency for making anti-Jewish comments in November, said at the protest, “There’s no place for genocide,” according to footage shared on social media

The 77-year-old Queens native was filmed standing on the Bowery as anti-Israel demonstrators clogged the span. 

A bystander named Allie who got off the M train into the midst of the disruptions chastised the protesters for going too far.

“I would hate to be anyone that was driving to work or dropping their kids to school today. That’s not protesting, that’s chaos,” the straphanger said. 

A 40-year-old man, Louis, said he looked at his GPS before heading into the city and only saw red on his route, so he took the subway.

“Normally, I would say it’s about 35 minutes, 45 minutes on a bad day,’’ he said of his commute across the river. “The GPS said like an hour and a half. That’s more than double. So train it was.”

Asad Bok, 30, who works for the city’s Department of Buildings near the Brooklyn Bridge, said he is Muslim and sympathizes with the Palestinian cause. But other things are “getting out of hand” in New York City and the protesters should focus on those local problems, he said.

“We have much bigger issues here in New York. We have a huge homelessness problem we’re not addressing,” Bok said. “For other countries’ issues [to] affect New York like this, it’s mayhem.” 

Luis Mora, who was delayed trying to make it to his window installation job in Manhattan because of Monday’s protest, agreed. “This is no good. I’m just trying to work, I don’t know what’s going on. I know [in the Middle East] things are very bad and they have problems, but these protests, what can they do?” Mora asked. “They are protesting here, you think it’s going to help things over there?”

A demonstrator named Jerry said the protest was justified to bring attention to Israel’s 3-month-old war on Hamas. The Palestinian terror group attacked Israel on Oct. 7, killing more than 1,200 people, many civilians, prompting Israel to launch an offensive that has killed thousands of Palestinians and left a dire humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

“They’ll call us ‘Hamas supporters.’ Or at the very least call these disruptions ‘violent.’ Inconvenience is not violence,” he said, adding that he hoped the demonstrations would convince US politicians to stop supporting the war.

“The city is spending a lot of money on us,” he boasted. “In our system, all of our elected officials are bought, so there’s a turning point where their support for anything, when it no longer becomes profitable, they flip. And that’s what makes change in this system.”

Joe, a construction worker in the area, said he was glad police were cracking down on those snarling traffic. 

“Yeah I do think they should be arrested — you’re inconveniencing people that have nothing to do with what’s going on over there,” he said. 

Travis, a 32-year-old Brooklyn resident who saw the uptick in police presence near the Williamsburg Bridge, said he was also glad to hear of the arrests. 

“I feel like the penalties for blocking traffic or blocking someone in should be enforced so people  wouldn’t be so keen to protest,” he said.

The Holland Tunnel was reopened for New Jersey-bound traffic just before 10:40 a.m., while all of the bridges reopened by 11:15 a.m., officials said.

A superintendent for a building near the Brooklyn Bridge said he is originally from Ireland and protested for the IRA. He said the Israel-Hamas war is the “same bulls–t” between the Irish and the English. 

The worker, named Gerry, said he doesn’t condone the bridge shutdowns but that he understands why the protesters felt the need to do it.

“I’m not saying it’s right, but if you want people to listen, you need havoc,” Gerry said. “It’s when people start shutting down bridges, breaking glass, smashing things — that’s when people open their eyes.”

Controversial George Washington University Professor Resigns Following Antisemitic Discrimination

A psychology professor accused of discriminating against Jewish and Israeli students left the University amid an ongoing federal investigation into her alleged misconduct.

Lara Sheehi, an assistant professor of clinical psychology, left GW to teach at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies in Qatar. Her departure from the University comes nine months after The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights launched an investigation into alleged discrimination in a psychology course she taught in Fall 2022.

The Algemeiner Journal, a New York-based paper that covers Jewish and Israeli issues, first reported the news Thursday.

University spokesperson Julia Metjian confirmed that Sheehi no longer works at GW but declined to comment on how her departure will affect the ongoing investigation against Sheehi and the University.

“As you can imagine, while this is an aligned professional and personal choice, I have mixed emotions, especially as GW has been my professional home since I was a graduate student,” Sheehi said in an email sent to the Professional Psychology Program faculty that was obtained by the Algemeiner Journal.

Sheehi could not be reached for comment. The Doha Institute for Graduate Studies in Qatar did not immediately return a request for comment.

Sheehi taught at GW since 2016 and received her doctorate of psychology from the University in 2010, according to her LinkedIn. She did not teach any classes in the Spring 2023 or Fall 2023 semesters and was not scheduled to teach any this spring, according to the schedule of classes. The final classes she taught at GW were in Fall 2022 — Third Year Psychotherapy and Diversity I.

StandWithUs, a Jewish and pro-Israel advocacy organization, filed a Title VI complaint with The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights in January 2023, accusing Sheehi of antisemitic behavior toward Jewish and Israeli students in the Fall 2022 Diversity I, a graduate-level psychology course. During the course, students took issue with some of her statements and lectures, including a time she allegedly told an Israeli student, “It’s not your fault you were born in Israel,” and for reportedly not featuring class materials covering antisemitism. The complaint states that University faculty and administrators “retaliated” with “disciplinary proceedings” against students who spoke up about the “hostile environment” Sheehi created in her classroom for Jewish and Israeli students.

Sheehi responded to the allegations in February 2023 in an article published in the liberal-leaning magazine CounterPunch, arguing the complaint is a “misrepresentation” of her conduct and “targets” her for being an Arab woman advocating for Palestinians. More than 2,000 students, alumni, faculty and advocates signed more than half a dozen statements supporting Sheehi between January and February 2023.

GW officials launched a third-party investigation into the Title VI complaint using GW-hired investigators from the Crowell & Moring law firm and found “no evidence” of discriminatory conduct, according to an email former interim University President Mark Wrighton sent to community members in March 2023. Wrighton did not release the full report online but said the summary “faithfully represents” the contents of the investigation.

In April 2023, two weeks after officials released Crowell & Moring’s findings that many of the allegations of antisemitism were “inaccurate” and “decontextualized,” The Office for Civil Rights launched an investigation into the claims in the StandWithUs complaint. The Office for Civil Rights did not immediately return a request for comment on the status of the investigation.

Following the complaint, Sheehi has become a widely cited incident of antisemitism at GW, which has turned more acute since the Israel-Hamas war began.

Seven GW alumni serving in the House of Representatives sent a letter to University President Ellen Granberg in October after members of Students for Justice in Palestine projected anti-Israel statements onto Gelman Library, calling for officials to take “immediate action” to protect Jewish students and referencing the StandWithUs complaint against Sheehi as an example of antisemitism at the University. A November letter sent to Granberg and signed by over 1,000 alumni following the projections called on the University to formulate a “clear plan” for combating antisemitism and listed the allegations against Sheehi as an example of University officials not giving adequate attention to previous incidents.

New Jersey Woman Shocked by Antisemitic Hate Speech from Gas Station Attendant

This morning, a woman shared with LNN that she stopped at the Exxon gas station on Cox Cro Road and Route 9, near the Whitesville community in Toms River. She handed her credit card to a Middle Eastern-looking gas attendant and asked him to fill up her vehicle. After looking at her credit card he must have assumed she was an Arab because of her Sefardi last name, and in a friendly way he began a burst of antisemitic hate speech against Israel.

The woman, shocked and upset, tried to stop the hateful talk. She told the attendant she was Jewish and asked him to stop, but he continued for a whole five minutes. In response, she took a stand by requesting her card back and deciding not to support the gas station. Unfortunately, the woman was in a hurry and didn’t have time to speak to the manager or call the police.

Instances like these need a united response from our community. We must stand against discrimination and hate speech because such behavior is unacceptable. The next time your car needs gas, you know which gas station not to support.

Oregon Council Members Receive Antisemitic Postcards in Mail

Corvallis City Council members received this weekend by mail two versions of postcards dripping in antisemitic and anti-transgender messaging. 

The Corvallis Police Department was informed and is looking into it, according to Councilor Tracey Yee. She said in an email that Corvallis police would be in contact with each of the recipients and are also consulting with the FBI.

An antisemitic caricature of a Jewish man with exaggerated, stereotypical features is on the front of one of two postcards received at the councilors' home addresses, along with a website promoting the distribution of antisemitic fliers.

The Jewish advocacy group StopAntisemitism has been tracking the activities of those responsible - the Goyim Defense League’ or ‘GDL’ for over five years and state they vilify Jews with their premeditated hate campaigns.

On the back of the first postcard is a Holocaust denial message, along with the address of another website promoting neo-Nazi propaganda and activism.

Postcards sent to Corvallis City Council members depict racist caricatures and language, seen in macro photography of images made Jan. 8.

“Angry white goyim will never be silenced,” it says on the back.

“These postcards were mailed to educate public servants without malicious intent,” the postcards say on the front.

Yee was repulsed and indignant.

“This racist, antisemitic material is disgusting to say the least,” Yee said. “But to indicate that the purpose is ‘to educate public servants without malicious intent’ is absurd.”

The second postcard is almost exclusively text.

Councilor Jan Napack confirmed receiving one of the postcards but declined to comment, saying via email that City Manager Mark Shepard asked councilors to refer any questions back to him or Patrick Rollens, the city’s public information officer.

Corvallis councilor Tracey Yee shared images of the postcard she received this weekend, as seen in macro photography.

Rollens said the mayor and most, if not all, of the council received postcards. He confirmed the incident was referred to police for investigation to see if it constitutes a criminal offense of some sort.

He added that he’s not aware of any instances in recent years of councilors being similarly targeted.

Yee said to her knowledge, councilors Charlyn Ellis, Laurie Chaplen, Hyatt Lytle, Paul Shaffer, Jan Napack, Gabe Shepherd and Tony Cadena received postcards. It’s unconfirmed whether Councilors Briae Lewis also received them. 

“I find these disturbing,” Mayor Charles Maughan said via email. “Hate has no place in Corvallis.”

Shepherd confirmed receiving a postcard as well, saying in an email he is disgusted and appalled at the antisemitic and white supremacist rhetoric and imagery. He noted the lack of a return address, calling that out as cowardly.

“I agree with other councilors that hate and hate speech is not welcome in our city,” Shepherd said.

Chaplen received both postcards.

“I believe in free speech. However, I disagree with the sentiments of both cards due to its nature and bias,” Chaplen said by email. “People need to come together and engage in polite conversations to understand each other and find commonalities instead of being divisive.”

On the front of the second postcard was the same disinformation as the first postcard and an anti-transgender rant on the back — apparently an attempt to finish a public comment that was cut short during a City Council meeting on Tuesday, Jan. 2.

The text seen on the second postcard sent to Corvallis City Council home addresses this weekend. 

The speaker was one of three trying to share antisemitic messages via teleconferencing. The third speaker was shut down for alluding to the antisemitic replacement theory — that Jews are behind a plot to diminish the influence of white people — while promoting the website that appears on the postcards sent to city councilors.

The unwelcome public comments from remote speakers came after the conflict between Israel and Hamas took center stage with guest speakers at City Hall.

The City Council has heard ongoing comments from supporters of Israel and Palestine since a Dec. 4 meeting during which both factions filled City Hall to speak to a proposed resolution supporting Palestine as Israel wages war on the terror group Hamas in Gaza.

In the lobby, boos and applause followed each commenter, and, on a few occasions, interactions devolved into heated exchanges among attendees, involving some cussing. Some raised concerns about the language of the resolution and misinformation, as well as the questionable impact of a city-level resolution on global events.

Authorities in California Launch Manhunt for Pro-Hamas Suspect Linked to Assault on Jewish Woman

Police in El Cerrito have released photos of man suspected of a hate crime after they said a woman carrying an Israeli flag was attacked during a weekend protest calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

Officers said Monday that ceasefire protesters and counter-protesters marched from neighboring Albany to El Cerrito on Saturday. About 100 protesters took over the intersection of San Pablo Avenue and Carlson Boulevard for about an hour, while a group of counter-protesters holding Israeli flags stood on the sidewalk.

During the protest, police said a male protester pushed a woman to the ground from behind. He then took the woman's Israel flag from her hands by force, then burned the flag in the street.

Police said the woman suffered a minor injury.

According to officers, the incident was captured on video and is being investigated as a hate crime.

"The El Cerrito Police Department supports the constitutional rights of all people to freedom of speech and assembly. However, when these acts become criminal, they will be thoroughly investigated and presented to the District Attorney's Office for review and prosecution when appropriate," the department said in a statement Monday.

"I was very shaken. I'm still shaken by it," said one of the Jewish counter-protestors who, according to police, were attacked during the ceasefire demonstration. The woman requested to remain anonymous.

"They rushed over to us, again, blocking us, and they started to grab our flags and our signs," she recounted to CBS News Bay Area.

Police released three photos of the suspect, who had his face covered with a black and white keffiyeh scarf and was wearing what officers described as a "distinctive" jacket. The suspect was also seen wearing a dark cap, a dark red shirt and black pants.

In one of the photos, the suspect was seen using a camera, while another photo shows the man carrying a black backpack.

Jewish Businesses in California Targeted in Antisemitic Hate Crime Spree

The Los Angeles Police Department has launched hate crime investigations after multiple Jewish-owned businesses in Woodland Hills were vandalized, including two stores two doors from each other. 

An LAPD spokesperson confirmed to KTLA that officers responded to a call of vandalism at a business in the 20900 block of Victory Boulevard just after 8 a.m. on Saturday morning. 

When they arrived, they found that a rock had been thrown at a business with a note written in Aramaic. 

Surveillance video captures a man walking up to the business before throwing a rock through the storefront. 

A Jewish-owned business two doors down on the same property was also vandalized, likely by the same suspect or suspects, one business owner believes.

“Apparently, only me and my neighbor who have a mezuzah outside got broken into,” one storeowner said. “So, we know it’s a hate crime, and oddly enough, when we came in, there was a rock that said ‘payback’ and ‘glory,’ and I don’t know what that means.” 

“Obviously, these guys are not happy with us being Jewish in the neighborhood,” he added. 

The owners of the vandalized businesses told KTLA that another business – a dance studio – was vandalized on the same morning, and that another nearby Jewish-owned establishment had been vandalized two days prior.

The owner of the dance studio confirmed that she is not Jewish.

No injuries were reported in any of the vandalisms. No suspect descriptions were immediately released. 

Antisemitic, Pro-Hamas Slurs Halt New York High School Girls' Basketball Game

A New York high school girls’ basketball game was aborted last week after the home team hurled antisemitic slurs at their Jewish opponents against the backdrop of the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas terror group.

Varsity teams from The Leffell School, a private Jewish school in Hartsdale, and Roosevelt High School, a public school in Yonkers, played each other on Thursday night in a non-league game.

During the game, which also reportedly turned physically violent, a Roosevelt player told a visiting Jewish opponent, “I support Hamas, you f-cking Jew,” The New York Post reported, citing the New York City Public Schools Alliance, a group of parents and teachers dedicated to combating antisemitism.

A New York high school girls’ basketball game was aborted last week after the home team hurled antisemitic slurs at their Jewish opponents against the backdrop of the ongoing war between Israel and the Hamas terror group.

Varsity teams from The Leffell School, a private Jewish school in Hartsdale, and Roosevelt High School, a public school in Yonkers, played each other on Thursday night in a non-league game.

During the game, which also reportedly turned physically violent, a Roosevelt player told a visiting Jewish opponent, “I support Hamas, you f-cking Jew,” The New York Post reported, citing the New York City Public Schools Alliance, a group of parents and teachers dedicated to combating antisemitism.

The Leffell School Lions’ head coach, John Tessitore, held a discussion with his players and they decided to end the game after the third quarter.

The development saw Roosevelt High School agree to a voluntary forfeit of the game.

Following the incident, Leffell senior player Robin Bosworth wrote an op-ed in the student paper The Lion’s Roar saying that right from the beginning of the game there were “substantially more jabs and comments thrown at the players on our team than what I have experienced in the past.”

She said Roosevelt players shouted “Free Palestine,” along with antisemitic slurs.

Then, in the third quarter, “members of our team started to get injured from the other team’s physical style of play,” Bosworth said.

“I have played a sport every athletic season throughout my high school career, and I have never experienced this kind of hatred directed at one of my teams before,” wrote Bosworth, who is also the paper’s editor. “Instead of responding to hatred with more of the same, we chose to separate ourselves from the situation and leave with dignity and pride in who we are and what we believe in.”

“Attacking a team because of their school’s religious association is never acceptable, but especially due to the current war in Israel and the world’s rise in antisemitism, this felt extremely personal to me and many members of my team,” she said.

In a letter to the school community reported on by the Post, school head Michael Kay wrote that “a small number of players on the opposing team directed hurtful, antisemitic comments toward members of our team” and said he was “incredibly proud” of how the Leffell players responded.

Roosevelt’s athletic director, Kyle Calabro, later apologized, according to Kay, and vowed “the follow-up would be swift and appropriate.”

The day after the game, Roosevelt principal Edward DeChent also apologized to Kay while detailing “investigative steps” that were being taken as well as “disciplinary consequences and educational responses,” according to the Post report.

The Yonkers Public Schools district said in a statement: “It has come to our attention that a student-athlete made a statement involving ‘free Palestine.’ This incident was promptly addressed in line with our district’s policies and values.”

There has been a sharp rise in antisemitic incidents around the world, including in the US, since October 7, when the war between Israel and Hamas erupted with a devastating attack by the Palestinian terror group, which killed some 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducted another 240 people as hostages into the Gaza Strip.

Israel responded with a military campaign aimed at destroying Hamas, removing it from power in Gaza, and freeing the hostages.

UK White Supremist Podcasters Jailed for Inciting Hate Against Jews

Two men, 40-year-old Christopher Gibbons and 36-year-old Tyrone Patten-Walsh were both jailed following an investigation by London’s Metropolitan Police, the police announced on Thursday The pair had been investigated by the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command after their podcast was found to encourage listeners to commit violent acts against Jews and other ethnic minorities. 

Both men had been charged in 2021 for several terrorism offenses, of which they have now been convicted of all charges.

The neo-Nazi pair had aired homophobic, racist, antisemitic, Islamophobic, and misogynistic in 21 episodes of their podcast, it was stated. Gibbons had also collected and published an online library containing extremist right-wing texts. The library was said to contain “500 videos of extreme right-wing-related speeches and propaganda documents.”

The podcasters had originally drawn public attention for calling for Prince Harry and his son to be killed, for having an interracial relationship with Megan Markle, the New York Times reported.

“They are dedicated and unapologetic white supremacists,” the prosecutor Anne Whyte said in court at their trial, according to media reports. “They thought that if they used the format of a radio show, as good as in plain sight, they could pass off their venture as the legitimate exercise of their freedom of speech.”

While the impact of the podcast can not be truly known, police said that it had amassed 1,000 subscribers and the content had been viewed more than 152,000 times.

Gibbons was sentenced to eight years imprisonment “for eight counts of encouraging acts of terrorism, contrary to section one of the Terrorism Act 2006, and two counts of dissemination of terrorist publications, contrary to section two of the Terrorism Act 2006,” it was announced. Patten-Walsh was sentenced to seven years in prison for eight counts of encouraging acts of terrorism.

Commander Dominic Murphy, who leads the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command, said: “The material that Gibbons and Patten-Walsh shared is exactly the kind that has the potential to draw vulnerable people – particularly young people – into terrorism.

“We are determined to identify and hold to account individuals pushing this material. In this case, officers reviewed hours-upon-hours of material to present a compelling case.

“I hope this case and today’s sentencing sends a clear message that there are serious consequences for those who share terrorist material or encourage others to become involved in terrorism.”

Maryland Middle School Students Discover Swastika

A swastika was found in front of Kingsview Middle School in Germantown Thursday morning as staff and students were arriving to start the school day.

Staff at the school removed the graffiti as soon as it was noticed, according to a letter from Principal Dyan Harrison. School officials and the Montgomery County Police were notified.

“To be clear, discrimination in any form must not be tolerated,” Harrison wrote in a letter to school parents and guardians.

“Kingsview Middle School is rooted in a tradition that celebrates our diversity and demonstrates academic excellence. This type of behavior is totally unacceptable and will not be tolerated,” Harrison wrote.

Some schools throughout the district have experienced an uptick in antisemitism since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israel and the ensuing war in Gaza.

NYPD Searching for Men who Desecrated Menorah

The NYPD is searching for a half-dozen suspects who allegedly knocked over and destroyed a menorah at a Staten Island shopping plaza late last month in a suspected antisemitic hate crime.

The department's Hate Crime Task Force released images Friday of the six young males they're after in the Dec. 24 vandalism in New Dorp.

The menorah was standing at 2656 Hylan Blvd. inside The Boulevard shopping plaza when the group targeted it around 9:30 p.m., according to cops.

They kicked over the menorah, causing it to crash to the ground and break, police said.

The suspects were last seen headed northbound on Hylan Boulevard.

No injuries were reported in the incident.

The incident came amid a 121% increase in anti-Jewish hate crimes in the city in December compared to December 2022, and as the three-month Israel-Hamas war continues.

Swastikas Discovered in Western Massachusetts's High School

A swastika was drawn onto a classroom whiteboard at Longmeadow High School and discovered after students returned from winter break, prompting law enforcement to open an investigation with school administration.

In a letter to the school community on Jan. 3, Superintendent Marty O’Shea described the swastika as “small” and “faintly drawn,” and said it was a “disturbing and disheartening event.”

“Certainly, racist, discriminatory speech of any kind is not consistent with the policies of Longmeadow Public Schools, and is not aligned with our commitment to being a learning community that embraces and affirms all student identities and cultures,” the letter read.

“LPS denounces any acts of hate, racism or discrimination in any form,” the superintendent said.

O’Shea also reshared a statement that’d been previously sent on Dec. 27, which included resources for school community members “to foster a culture of respect and unity.”

The statement also said, “Recent global and national events remind us to stress the importance of protecting students from discrimination based on shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics.”

Though the letter did not include mention of any ramifications or potential disciplinary actions, its 2023-2024 Student Handbook has a policy section titled “Harassment,” which states “all alleged harassment,” outside of Title IX, which has separate policies is not tolerated by the school.

It listed, but was not limited to, 14 basis for harassment, including religion.

“Employees or students who have been found to violate this policy will be subject to discipline up to and including, termination of employment, subject to contractual disciplinary obligations or up to an expulsion,” the handbook said.

The Longmeadow Police Department confirmed to MassLive its school resource officers had opened an investigation into the suspected hate speech incident with school officials. No further information was available on the investigation or circumstances surrounding the incident.

Many former and current parents of Longmeadow students were in an uproar over the swastika drawing, including in a Longmeadow Facebook group post on the topic.

“There’s just no place for it,” Richard Goldstein, a father of two former Longmeadow High School students and Jewish resident of the town told MassLive Thursday morning.

“The schools have a real opportunity and a challenge ahead of them to educate these children on what’s right and wrong, around all forms of hate, not just antisemitism,” Goldstein said.

The Longmeadow father cited his own religion and the ongoing Israel-Hamas war as points of sensitivity for himself, and potentially for other members of the Longmeadow community, in light of the discovered hate symbol.

Shawn Schrager, a Jewish father from Longmeadow who currently has a daughter at the high school and a child in the town’s middle school, called the incident “shocking” and “disappointing.”

Schrager made a comment vouching in favor of the superintendent’s letter to the community, which stuck out on a post questioning the letter that’d been shared on Jan. 3 in the Longmeadow MA Open Forum Facebook page.

The open forum post had said the superintendent “emailed and confirmed it was a swastika, but felt the need to call it a small and faint one,” then quipped, “Does that make it ok?”

The post garnered more than 70 comments from both supporters and non-supporters of the email.

“There is no ‘small’ symbol,” a user named Gracie Jones agreed with the post in a comment underneath. “The fact that that it’s there speaks volumes and may as well be as big as the size of the building.”